The transition from the Middle Stone Age (MSA) to the Later Stone Age (LSA) in South Africa was not associated with the appearance of anatomically modern humans and the extinction of Neandertals, as in the Middle to Upper Paleolithic transition in Western Europe. tusks, ostrich eggshell beads, bone arrowheads, engraved bones, bored stones, and digging sticks; (40,000 and 20,000 y ago in South Africa is poorly known, and the timing of the Middle Stone Age (MSA) to Late Stone Age (LSA) transition is debated. In 1999 the LSA was defined (1) as a culture-stratigraphic unit that includes all assemblages dated within the last 20,000 y, characterized by artifacts such as hafted microlithic tools; bored stones used as digging-stick weights; bows and arrows; polished bone tools, such as awls, linkshafts, and arrowheads; fishing equipment; beads of shell and ostrich eggshell; and engraved decoration on bone and wood items. The earliest technological expression of the LSA would be the Robberg Industry dated 22C21 to 12 ka BP (1C3). In the 1970s Beaumont and colleagues described the Border Cave stratigraphic sequence (200 E-7050 ka to the present (4C8). In the upper part of the sequence two layers, 1WA and 1BS Lower B+C, now dated 44C42 ka cal BP, contain evidence of some remarkable changes in stone and organic tool manufacture and in the making of decorated objects and personal ornaments. Some of these innovations have antecedents in the preceding Howiesons Poort (HP) and Still Bay periods (1), but they disappear or are extremely scarce in the following post-HP period, 60C40 ka (9). According to Beaumont, the appearance of new tools and ornaments [bored stones, digging sticks, ostrich eggshell (OES) beads, bone points, engraved bone, and wood objects], together with high frequencies of microliths made by the bipolar technique and hafted with pitch, and of scaled pieces mark the beginning of the LSA (early LSA or ELSA) at Border Cave. Some scholars have accepted this interpretation (10); others have rejected it (11), expressed doubts about the association of organic artifacts (11C13), or suggested that the transition MSACLSA took place between 32 and 22 ka, setting the beginning of the LSA at 22 ka (14, 15). The temporal boundary between the MSA and the LSA and how the transition took place in the region remain controversial. New data are warranted. Results The Sequence. The post-HP is subdivided into four main layers: 2WA, 2BS Lower C, 2BS Lower A+B, and 2BS UP. ELSA layers are 1WA and 1BS Lower B+C (Table 1 and 14 cm thick, dated to 60 3 ka by electron spin resonance (ESR) (7) and directly overlying 3BS, the last HP layer (56 ka (8) has not been studied in detail. Preliminary observations indicate an industry similar to 2WA. The 2BS Lower A+B and 2BS UP are dated by 14C to >49 and 49C45 ka cal BP, respectively (and species (39). The occurrence of both sugiol and totarol-7-one suggests the use of the bark of a species belonging to the family, and in particular of (40). This hypothesis is confirmed by the analysis of reference materials of bark and sapwood of and and of a reference pitch prepared with E-7050 the bark of occurs only in the winter-rainfall Western Cape, but pollen and charcoal archives indicate that forests were more widespread in the past (41, 42). The amount of organic material detected in sample 50 is extremely reduced with respect to the other samples. Nonetheless, the biomarker of a suberin-containing pitch was detected, together with some Rabbit Polyclonal to Chk2 (phospho-Thr383) sterols, both of plant and animal origin E-7050 (sitosterol, stigmasterol, and cholesterol). Ground Stone Artifacts Bored stones are implements with no parallel in the MSA. Two fragments are from layer 1WA (20,000 BP (43). The.